The foremost recommendation from a commission established by President Donald Trump to address the opioid crisis spiraling across the United States was that he declare the epidemic a national emergency.

“With approximately 142 Americans dying every day, America is enduring a death toll equal to September 11th every three weeks,” read the interim report released by the Commission on Combating Drug Addiction and the Opioid Crisis on Monday.

The bipartisan commission, which is led by New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, said that the declaration of a national emergency would allow Trump to leverage the executive branch and federal agencies to combat an addiction epidemic that was linked to more than 33,000 overdose deaths in 2015, the last year for which data was available from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

It would allow the administration to remove several barriers to treatment. For example, the commission recommended that the administration waive a federal rule that limits the number of Medicaid recipients who can receive residential addiction treatment. Under current law, Medicaid funds can’t be used to reimburse inpatient facilities that treat “mental diseases,” including addiction, if they have more than 16 beds. Stripping that barrier, the commission said, would “immediately open treatment to thousands of Americans in existing facilities in all 50 states.”

Declaring a national emergency could also help establish federal incentives to improve access to treatment with the help of medications like methadone, buprenorphine or Vivitrol, said Bertha Madras, a member of the commission. She noted it would enable the Trump administration to require education on the proper prescription of opioids for medical professionals through the Drug Enforcement Administration. As FRONTLINE reported in the film Chasing Heroin, the roots of the current crisis can be traced back to the over-prescription of addictive opioid painkillers over the last two decades.

“I do think there’s opportunity that this declaration can summon the resolve and resources of individuals within the federal government to act and act very quickly,” said Madras, a professor of psychobiology at Harvard Medical School.

From Madras’s perspective, the most urgent matters at hand are saving people from overdose deaths, and figuring out treatment options. “Just handing out Narcan [an overdose reversal drug] saves people’s lives, but that’s not a public health policy. It’s like leaving a person with a heart attack in a shopping mall. You apply the paddles, you revive them, and you just let them lie there and walk away,” Madras said. “And you know that a person who’s had a heart attack is at very high risk of having one again.” Overdoses are the same, she noted.